Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電) is locked in an investment duel with Samsung Electronics Co to meet booming US demand for Apple Inc’s iPhone and other smartphones, benefiting electronics suppliers around the globe.
TSMC, the world’s biggest custom-chip maker, plans record spending on plants and equipment this year. It is spending US$12 billion on factories — more than Intel Corp has ever spent in one year — to counter investments that Samsung is making to win chip orders from Apple, Qualcomm Inc and its own handset division.
The spending is a boon for suppliers such as US firms Applied Materials Inc and Lam Research Corp and Dutch company ASML Holding NV, according to supply-chain data compiled by Bloomberg. Applied Materials, the largest maker of chip equipment, receives a third of its revenue from TSMC and Samsung. Globally, suppliers’ sales rose 19 percent last year to US$38 billion and might jump 15 percent this year, estimates from industry group SEMI show.
Photo: Bloomberg
The rush for smartphones, and the tools to make parts for them, is one reflection of economic growth prospects in the US — forecast to lead the G7 countries for the next two years — and in China, where even reduced estimates of 7 percent expansion is about five times that of the eurozone. For the fourth quarter of last year, Apple reported iPhone sales rose 46 percent to 74.5 million units, putting it just behind Samsung’s 75.1 million units, according to research firm International Data Corp (IDC).
“That’s the No. 1 thing that drives our business, and it’s the key competitive battleground for our customers,” Applied Materials chief executive officer Gary Dickerson said in an interview. “That battle is still playing itself out.”
To keep enticing consumers, new phones need more powerful and more power-efficient “brains.” That is where chipmakers come in, and why TSMC and Samsung are locked in an increasingly expensive battle to be first with new production technology.
By shrinking the circuit lines on semiconductors — measured in nanometers — manufacturers can improve chip capabilities or get more out of a production run. Modern plants cost more than US$5 billion to build and equip and are obsolete in five years or less, so they need to operate 24 hours a day.
The tables can turn quickly. Samsung had been the supplier of the most important chip in Apple’s iPhone since its debut in 1997. That changed in the iPhone 6 with Apple’s A8 chips, which are manufactured by TSMC.
Now the South Korean chipmaker is trying to leapfrog TSMC in production technology to win the next round. UBS AG estimates Samsung made US$3.7 billion in capital expenditures on its processor business alone last year and might raise that to US$4.9 billion this year. Samsung does not disclose such numbers, but executives on a Jan. 29 conference call confirmed they would boost spending this year.
“Samsung is in the lead because they’ve bet the farm on it,” IHS Corp analyst Len Jelinek said. “They’ve had to.”
Founded in 1987, TSMC forged a business model that lets chipmakers like Qualcomm and Broadcom Corp forgo expensive factories and outsource production of chips using their designs to facilities in Taiwan. Its annual revenue from the communications category more than doubled to US$14 billion in five years, now accounting for more than half of sales.
For the nation’s biggest company — which receives an average of US$8 in chip sales for every smartphone sold globally — keeping its factories equipped with the most advanced technology is important to compete with Samsung as well as other rivals including Globalfoundries Inc and Intel, which recently entered the business of making chips for other companies.
TSMC, Intel and Samsung’s processor businesses are set to account for about 60 percent of total spending on semiconductor equipment this year, according to Bloomberg calculations based on estimates from UBS and SEMI.
Applied Materials receives about 21 percent of its revenue from TSMC and 12 percent from Samsung, according to the supply-chain data compiled by Bloomberg. Lam Research, based in Fremont, California, gets about 37 percent of its sales from the two Asian companies.
Like Apple, other US companies buy from, rather than sell to, TSMC. The Taiwanese company’s biggest customer is Qualcomm, a San Diego-based designer of mobile-phone processors and modems that accounts for about 22 percent of TSMC’s revenue. Apple makes up about 8.2 percent, data show.
ASML Holding, based in the Netherlands, gets more than a third of its revenue from Samsung, with TSMC providing more than 8 percent. With Samsung and TSMC raising spending to add capacity, one of the two companies might be making bets that will not pay off.
While TSMC is boosting spending by as much 25 percent this year from US$9.5 billion last year, it is forecasting only a 5 percent rise in chip-industry sales and 12 percent for the custom foundry business. That suggests it intends to win market share.
“We don’t build capacity on speculation,” TSMC’s 83-year-old founder and chairman Morris Chang (張忠謀) told investors on Jan. 15, predicting his company would outgrow the broader foundry sector by a few percentage points this year. “We build capacity when we know that it’s already sold.”
Samsung expressed similar confidence on a conference call with investors, saying its investment slated for the second half “is already backed up by customers.”
The big budget announcements by TSMC and Samsung have not yet translated into a flood of orders for chip equipment. Applied Materials said orders from foundries fell in the three months ended on Jan. 25. The firn expects that pattern to reverse in the second half as the chipmakers work their way through the difficulties of shifting to more advanced production, Dickerson said.
While Apple is the main prize, Samsung’s phonemaking division, along with rivals like Lenovo and Xiaomi Corp (小米), are looking for better-performing parts themselves as they try to take on the iPhone.
“All of these guys are racing to be on the leading edge of technology with their phones,” Jelinek said. “TSMC are going to come forward and say we’re going to spend whatever it takes to win that next business. Right now they’re behind Samsung.”
Taiwan Transport and Storage Corp (TTS, 台灣通運倉儲) yesterday unveiled its first electric tractor unit — manufactured by Volvo Trucks — in a ceremony in Taipei, and said the unit would soon be used to transport cement produced by Taiwan Cement Corp (TCC, 台灣水泥). Both TTS and TCC belong to TCC International Holdings Ltd (台泥國際集團). With the electric tractor unit, the Taipei-based cement firm would become the first in Taiwan to use electric vehicles to transport construction materials. TTS chairman Koo Kung-yi (辜公怡), Volvo Trucks vice president of sales and marketing Johan Selven, TCC president Roman Cheng (程耀輝) and Taikoo Motors Group
Among the rows of vibrators, rubber torsos and leather harnesses at a Chinese sex toys exhibition in Shanghai this weekend, the beginnings of an artificial intelligence (AI)-driven shift in the industry quietly pulsed. China manufactures about 70 percent of the world’s sex toys, most of it the “hardware” on display at the fair — whether that be technicolor tentacled dildos or hyper-realistic personalized silicone dolls. Yet smart toys have been rising in popularity for some time. Many major European and US brands already offer tech-enhanced products that can enable long-distance love, monitor well-being and even bring people one step closer to
RECORD-BREAKING: TSMC’s net profit last quarter beat market expectations by expanding 8.9% and it was the best first-quarter profit in the chipmaker’s history Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co (TSMC, 台積電), which counts Nvidia Corp as a key customer, yesterday said that artificial intelligence (AI) server chip revenue is set to more than double this year from last year amid rising demand. The chipmaker expects the growth momentum to continue in the next five years with an annual compound growth rate of 50 percent, TSMC chief executive officer C.C. Wei (魏哲家) told investors yesterday. By 2028, AI chips’ contribution to revenue would climb to about 20 percent from a percentage in the low teens, Wei said. “Almost all the AI innovators are working with TSMC to address the
Malaysia’s leader yesterday announced plans to build a massive semiconductor design park, aiming to boost the Southeast Asian nation’s role in the global chip industry. A prominent player in the semiconductor industry for decades, Malaysia accounts for an estimated 13 percent of global back-end manufacturing, according to German tech giant Bosch. Now it wants to go beyond production and emerge as a chip design powerhouse too, Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim said. “I am pleased to announce the largest IC (integrated circuit) Design Park in Southeast Asia, that will house world-class anchor tenants and collaborate with global companies such as Arm [Holdings PLC],”